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EFFector - Volume 26, Issue 12 - We beat them to Lima

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EFFector - Volume 26, Issue 12 - We beat them to Lima

 
 
EFFector! Electronic Frontier Foundation
 
 

In our 639th issue:

We're opening a new front against secret IP treaties

In most issues of EFFector, we give an overview of all the work we're doing at EFF right now. This week, we’re taking a deep dive into a single issue: the Trans-Pacific Partnership and the role the United States Trade Representative plays in spearheading abusive copyright laws in the U.S. and around the world.

I’m Danny O’Brien, EFF’s new International Director. Five years ago, I worked on the EFF team that identified the threat of ACTA, a secret global intellectual property treaty we discovered was being used to smuggle Internet control provisions into the laws of over thirty countries. Together with an amazing worldwide coalition of activists from Europe to South Korea, we beat back that threat.

I’m writing to you today to explain what's happening with the new ACTA: the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP). TPP has been around since the Bush administration, but recently the pace has picked up, with governments saying they want to get the agreement signed and done by the end of this year.

Global activism can stop TPP, but preventing the endless merry-go-round of new IP treaties means tackling the problem at its roots. I'd like to describe what we're doing on both those fronts, and how you can help. But first, I'd like you to meet this gentleman:

Michael Froman, nominee for U.S. Trade Rep, could play a pivotal role in copyright policy worldwide.

Meet Michael Froman: The Most Important Man in Global Copyright

This is Michael Froman, and barring a scandal, he's about to be the new United States Trade Representative (USTR). The U.S. Trade Representative negotiates international trade agreements on behalf of the United States. Congress has one opportunity to ask him questions at his nomination hearing.

They should take full advantage of it. Right now, the only reason the public knows anything about what the USTR is doing on IP is that whistleblowers participating in the treaty process have leaked what they can. (Congressman Darrell Issa re-published the leaks on his own office site, over the USTR's objections).

Those documents show that the American proposals for the Trans-Pacific Partnership would export the worst of modern U.S. copyright law, and thwart other countries' ability to create laws that best meet their domestic needs:

  • The proposed rules could prevent individuals from circumventing DRM—the technical barriers put in place to make copying, accessing, and sharing copyrighted content more difficult. This would hinder technical fixes necessary to make content accessible for the blind or to unlock your phone.
  • It contains provisions that would, by default, regulate "temporary" reproductions of copyrighted files, thereby restricting all kinds of intrinsic functions of your computer.
  • It increases copyright terms well beyond international standards, adding some 20 years to copyright terms worldwide, potentially robbing the public domain of decades of cultural works.
  • In many countries, an allegation of infringement is not enough to get material taken offline. TPP’s proposals, by contrast, put in place a system (similar to the one we have in the U.S.) that encourages ISPs to take down content based on nothing but a notice. We’ve seen how that can be abused here—do we really want to export it wholesale?

Treaties like this also help to fossilize existing U.S. law and force other countries to sign up for American missteps. Momentum in D.C. for rolling back copyright terms and DRM law is growing, but opponents of those changes have argued that lawmakers can't undo their own mistakes—because, they say, we've already signed onto IP trade agreements that we supposedly can't undo.

What We're Doing

We're asking U.S. senators to use the nomination process to grill Froman about the USTR’s IP plans, and we’re petitioning him directly to adopt meaningful transparency and stop using trade agreements to push aggressive IP programs worldwide.

Could Froman really reform U.S. trade agreement strategies? Yes, but only if he and the Administration face coordinated pressure from American politicians and citizens plus resistance from other countries pushing back against American demands.

Which brings us to why EFF's Maira Sutton and Katitza Rodriguez are remotely working right now—from Lima, the capital of Peru.

Yara TPP!

Maira Sutton, EFF Global Policy Analyst, is on the ground in Lima, Peru, at the site of the TPP negotiations.

Starting today, the U.S. Trade Rep and negotiators from 10 other countries are meeting in Lima to take part in the latest round of negotiations for TPP.

We beat them there. Kat is our International Rights Director. She's also Peruvian. She's spent the last month in Lima working with fellow Peruvian technologists, makers and artists, highlighting how TPP will affect them. She has been working with the other groups fighting TPP on the ground, including Hiperderecho, Peru's own digital rights activism group.

Katitza Rodriguez, EFF's International Rights Director, has spent the last month working with activists in Peru.

The result? An explosion in information and public debate in Peru about TPP. Kat has written Spanish language editorials, met with Peruvian politicians, journalists, students, free software advocates and filmmakers. Lima's hackerspace, Escuelab, hosted a two-day hackathon that produced memes and microsites that explain TPP to fellow Peruvians and the world. There's even the inevitable Peruvian TPP Downfall video. Other hackerspaces took part around the world, producing sites with titles like http://whytheheckshouldicareaboutthetpp.com/.

The slogan and hashtag of Peruvians' digital rights activists is "#yaratpp", a slang term which means (roughly) "Warning! TPP!". Peruvians have joined the fight at Nonegociable.pe, asking their President to set clear non-negotiable lines to ensure that Peruvians' fundamental freedoms are respected in the TPP negotiations.

Help Us Stop the TPP – and the IP Treaty Tarpit

The TPP negotiators are on deadline in Lima. They've already said TPP's IP chapter is one of the "more challenging issues that remain." It's more challenging still when the host country is demanding to know why this trade agreement would undermine local entrepreneurs and artists. Meanwhile, politicians back in the U.S. are demanding a closer look at their head negotiator's IP stance.

Like battling ACTA, stopping the TPP and its descendants is going to be a long-term fight that will take a worldwide effort. But you can help us today by taking advantage of the Froman nomination to speak truth to power.

Sign our petition demanding that Froman usher in a new age of transparency as the next U.S. Trade Representative:

Stop USTR Secrecy

If you’re in the U.S., please also send a message to your representative to demand an end to these secret backdoor negotiations:

Don’t Let Them Trade Away Our Internet Freedoms

And if you're in Peru, join Hiperderecho and tell the Peruvian president that our digital rights are non-negotiable:

Pidamos juntos límites no negociables

Stay tuned to the Deeplinks blog for more updates on the fight for sensible global copyright policy.

Danny O'Brien, EFF's International Director. Photo by James Roberts, longtime EFF member.Defending your digital rights around the world,

Danny O’Brien
International Director
Electronic Frontier Foundation



 

Learn more:
The Trans-Pacific Partnership
What Is TPP? Biggest Global Threat to the Internet Since ACTA
Why the Heck Should I Care About the TPP?
Copyright Provisions in the TPP Would Stifle Innovation and Impede the Economy
Hackers, Makers, and Tinkerers: Here's How TPP Would Hurt You
Temporary Copies: A TPP Provision Disconnected from the Reality of the Modern Computer
TPP Creates Legal Incentives For ISPs To Police The Internet. What Is At Risk? Your Rights.

Other Resources:
KEI Online: TPP
PublicKnowledge: TPP
Stop the Trap
InfoJustice: The Trans-Pacific Partnership

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Editor: Parker Higgins, Activist
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